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Bangladeshi man arrested for plotting to blow up Federal Reserve Building

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Who knows, who cares.




No its not.

And your bald assertion is supposed to convince us that a meticulous, successful and thoroughly audited agency behaves in the way you think it might behave, and not in the way that it might be expected to behave, considering the amount of scrutiny and oversight that such institutions have to undergo?

Were you thinking when you wrote that?

Imam Anwar Al awlaki is still most respected preacher among european and american muslims specially converts. Bangladeshis hardly know about him.


Consider yourselves lucky.
 
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I just read on the net the under cover agent was Bengali .... Don't know eparer Bengali na oparer.
 
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Preaching of what??? Violence?

i don't know, i havent seen any of his video, I am equally active in different forums ( AC milan forum, religious forum) . Just saying what i saw!! Lots of people were converted through him!!
 
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CIA Undercover Shocks Danish Muslims

Morten%20Storm.jpg1.jpg

Muslim convert Morten Storm has unveiled that he was an undercover agent for the Danish intelligence service (PET) and the CIA

Revelations that a Danish Muslim convert was in reality an undercover agent posing as extremist in an attempt to trap young Muslims are sending shockwaves across the sizable minority in Denmark.

“The police and security services want us to trust them but they are sending agitators into our community to lead people astray,” Qadir Baksh, chairman of the Luton Islamic Center in Bury Park Road, told Luton Today newspaper on Wednesday, October 10.

A Muslim convert, Morten Storm, has unveiled that he was an undercover agent for the Danish intelligence service (PET) and the CIA.

Allowing FBI Mosque Spying for US Security

US Defends FBI Stings to Trap Muslims

He told Jyllands-Posten daily that he was recruited by PET in 2006 to track down extremists in the Scandinavian country.

He also said that he led the CIA to Al-Qaeda leader in Yemen Anwar Al-Awlaki, who was killed in a drone attack last year.

The convert moved to Luton in 1999, where he told community leaders that he wanted to start a new life after a history of extremism.

However, he started to propagate his radical ideas in an effort to lure young Muslims into his line.

“Certain people here propped him up, such as Al Muhajiroun,” Baksh said, referring to an outlawed Islamist group in Britain, which has an office in Denmark.

“They made him their scholar.”

The Muslim leader said that the undercover had tried hard to spread his radical ideas in the Muslim community.

“He tried very hard to spread mischief in the community,” he said.

“He would come to us and tell us his views, and we would send him away with his tail between his legs.”

Peaceful Muslims

Baksh said the radical ideas championed by the undercover largely fell on the deaf ears of most Danish Muslims.

“He was running around here, there and everywhere, with a corrupt version of Islam, and leading people astray,” he said.

“There are extremist jihadists in Luton and he was propagating their thoughts among young people, spreading lies about Islam.

“We thought he was probably being watched by the security services.”

The Muslim leader said that the behavior of the convert had raised suspicions in the community.

“Early on I had my suspicions about him, but I didn’t have clear evidence,” Baksh said.

“We know the CIA do conduct sting operations.”

The CIA and FBI are used to use fake operations to trap what they say “potential terror” suspects.

But the technique has sparked anger among US Muslims, who accuse the two agencies of trapping young Muslims into terrorism.

In 2009, Muslim groups had threatened to suspend all contacts with the FBI over its tactics of sending informants into mosques to trap worshippers.

“The vast majority of Muslims just want to get on with their lives and practise their religion in peace,” Baksh said.

Denmark is home to a Muslim minority of 200,000, making three percent of the country's 5.4 million population.

The Scandinavian country was the focus of Muslim anger in 2005 after a newspaper published cartoons lampooning Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessing be upon him).

Following the cartoons crisis, Muslims worldwide took many initiatives to remove widely circulated stereotypes about Islam in the West.
Danish Muslims established the European Committee for Honoring the Prophet, a grouping of 27 Danish Muslim organizations, to raise awareness about the merits and characteristics of the Prophet.
 
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US-Bangladesh meeting over Nafis at Night


US-Bangladesh meeting over Nafis at night | Bangladesh | bdnews24.com

Fri, Oct 19th, 2012 1:55 pm BdST
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Dhaka, Oct 19 (bdnews24.com) – The Bangladesh mission in Washington and the US State Department will have a meeting on Friday to ascertain the nationality of Quazi Mohammad Rezwanul Ahsan Nafis, who was arrested in New York following a 'sting operation' on Wednesday.

"We are yet to know his nationality. He may be a Bangladeshi citizen or a US citizen, or may have dual citizenship," Foreign Minister Dipu Moni told a press briefing on Friday.

"Whenever we are certain about his citizenship, we will ask for consular access."

If consular access is granted, a diplomat from the embassy would be able to meet Nafis in person.

The meeting will held be Bangladesh time 10:00pm (Washington time 12:00 noon).

Foreign Secretary Mijarul Quayes said, "I have asked the Ambassador (Akramul Qader) to give us feedback within two hours of the meeting."

The Minister said, "It is a serious matter and I will not speak until I get feedback from our US mission."

"If we cannot have a formal press conference, me or Foreign Secretary will convey the latest situation or issue a press release," she said.

The Minister ducked a direct question on why police was grilling Nafis when his citizenship was yet to be established.

"I will urge his family to have patience... The government always protects the interest of its citizens abroad," she said.

In a statement issued by the US Justice Department, it said Nafis was arrested on Wednesday morning in downtown Manhattan after he allegedly attempted to detonate what he believed to be a 1,000-pound bomb at the New York Federal Reserve Bank on Liberty Street in lower Manhattan's financial district.

"The defendant faces charges of attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction and attempting to provide material support to al-Qaeda," the statement said.

Confusion about Nafis' roots

Earlier, Ambassador Quader told bdnews24.com, "Bangladesh's name is everywhere in the media now. We've communicated with the State Department to get the name of the arrested youth's father and his address. We also want to know where he was studying."

"First we'll have to be sure about his citizenship. He may not be a Bangladeshi despite carrying a Bangladeshi passport. Rohingyas are also collecting Bangladeshi passports," he had said.

UN Resident Representative A K Momen had told bdnews24.com, "Even if Nafis is a Bangladeshi, it is a separate story. The people and the government of Bangladesh do not believe in terrorism."

Bangladeshi police detectives on Thursday raided the Jatrabari residence of Nafis and questioned his family members.

His family lives at 107/4, North Jatrabari residence and his father Quazi Mohammad Ahsanullah is a Vice President of the National Bank.

Nafis was a student of the North South University and before that he had studied in the Dhaka College.

The bomb charge

The US Department of Justice said in the statement on Wednesday Nafis had been charged with attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction and provide material support to al Qaeda. He faces life sentence in prison, if convicted.

The FBI said on Wednesday morning (evening in Bangladesh) Nafis parked a van laden with 'explosives' in front of the bank in Manhattan and went to the adjacent Millennium Hilton Hotel. From there, he repeatedly tried to set off the mobile phone detonator of the 1000-pound bomb. However, it did not explode as the explosive was fake.

The NYPD said that Nafis was led on by an undercover FBI agent into their trap. He was under surveillance since July after he tried to search reliable associates to carry out the attack on behalf of al-Qaeda.

Additional Deputy Commissioner of Police Masudur Rahman told bdnews24.com on Friday that the Nafis' family members were under watch. "They are not staying at their house at Jatrabari. They are staying at a nearby house of one of their relatives."

bdnews24.com/ssz/lh/nir/1344h
 
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Federal Reserve Bomb Conspiracy: FBI arrests another suspect


Federal Reserve Bomb Conspiracy: FBI Arrests Another Suspect - Global News Desk

October 19, 2012By Marion Dean
The Federal Reserve bomb plot, which led to the arrest of a Bangladeshi national on Wednesday by the FBI in a sting operation, has resulted in the arrest of another man, Howard Willie Carter II, who was an accomplice of the arrested Bangladeshi national in San Diego, as per a US law enforcement official.

Carter has been arrested on unconnected child pornography charges. A US government document has remarked that Carter was detained after an FBI agent unearthed 1000 images and three video files, consisting of child pornography, :-)woot: A child pornographer also joined in Jihad to blow up Federal Reserve) on a laptop and hard drive in the trashcan near Carter’s residence. Sleuths employed the material stored on the computer to trace it back to Carter.


The US authorities have asserted that Carter’s laptop also contained emails addressed to ‘Yaqeen’, which is a name Carter had employed in his conversations with Quazi Mohammad Nafis, the arrested Bangladeshi resident, who had come to the US in January on a student visa, with the goal of ravaging the US, as per the investigational officials.

The 21-year-old Bangladeshi national had been charged on Wednesday by the federal prosecutors in Brooklyn with conspiring to utilise weapons of mass annihilation and with presenting material aid to Al-Qaeda.

Prosecutors stated that the Bangladeshi national had attempted to detonate a 1000-pound bomb near the Federal Reserve building. The bomb was concealed in a van positioned close to the famous Federal Reserve bank on Liberty Street.

As part of FBI’s sting operation, an undercover agent provided the Bangladeshi man with bogus bomb material that couldn’t have exploded. Nafis had met the FBI secret agent numerous times to plot the attack on the Federal Bank in the financial district.

The Bangladeshi had mentioned to the FBI undercover agent that he was collaborating with Yaqeen, who has been mentioned as a co-conspirator in the complaint.

Nafis had been under FBI reconnaissance for some months as part of the sting operation, during which the undercover agent gave him the fake bomb material that Nafis tried to detonate on Wednesday near the bank by dialing a number on his cellphone. Subsequently, he was arrested.
 
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A few years ago I know someone who answered survey questions over the phone just saying yes or no as be was asked.

The following month he got $99 added to his phone bill with automatic renewal.

The scammers took his yes and nos to doctor a verbal agreement.

The informants are the worst scums who got flipped by FBI as part of a deal.
 
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Conflicting images emerge of NY terror suspect

NEW YORK—At the Missouri college where Quazi Mohammad Rezwanul Ahsan Nafis enrolled, a classmate said he often remarked that true Muslims don't believe in violence.

That image seemed startlingly at odds with the Bangladesh native's arrest in an FBI sting this week on charges of trying to blow up the Federal Reserve Bank in New York with what he thought was a 1,000-pound car bomb.

"I can't imagine being more shocked about somebody doing something like this," said Jim Dow, a 54-year-old Army veteran who rode home from class with Nafis twice a week. "I didn't just meet this kid a couple of times. We talked quite a bit. ... And this doesn't seem to be in character."

Nafis' family in Dhaka, Bangladesh, denied he could have been involved in the plot. His parents said he was incapable of such actions and came to America only to study.

Federal investigators, often accused by defense attorneys of entrapping and leading would-be terrorists along, said the 21-year-old Nafis made the first move over the summer, reaching out for accomplices and eventually contacting a government informant, who then went to federal authorities.

They said he also selected his target, drove the van loaded with dummy explosives up to the door of the bank, and tried to set off the bomb from a hotel room using a cellphone he thought had been rigged as a detonator.

During the investigation, he and the informant corresponded via Facebook and other social media, talked on the phone and met in hotel rooms, according to a law enforcement official who was not authorized to speak publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Nafis spoke of his admiration for Osama bin Laden, talked of writing an article about his plot for an al-Qaida-affiliated magazine, and said he would be willing to be a martyr but preferred to go home to his family after carrying out the attack, authorities said. And he also talked about wanting to kill President Barack Obama and bomb the New York Stock Exchange, a law enforcement official said.

Investigators said in court papers that he came to the U.S. bent on jihad and worked out the specifics of a plot when he arrived. While Nafis believed he had the blessing of al-Qaida and was acting on behalf of the terrorist group, he has no known ties, according to federal officials.

Nafis, who at the time of his arrest Wednesday was working as a busboy at a restaurant in Manhattan, was jailed without bail. His attorney has not commented on the case, but in other instances where undercover agents and sting operations were used, lawyers have argued entrapment.

Investigators would not say exactly how he initially contacted the government informant.

Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly, whose department had a role in the arrest as a member of a joint federal-state terrorism task force, said the entrapment argument rarely prevails.

"You have to be otherwise not disposed to do a crime," Kelly said. "And if it's your intent to do a crime, and somehow there are means made available, then generally speaking, the entrapment defense does not succeed."

Meanwhile, a law enforcement official said the bomb plot investigation led to the arrest of a San Diego man on child **** charges.

Howard Willie Carter II was arraigned Thursday in federal court in San Diego on three counts of child pornography. He pleaded not guilty.

Investigators discovered child **** on Carter's computer after he communicated online with Nafis.

The official was not authorized to speak publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Carter wasn't charged in the bomb plot, but he's listed as an unnamed co-conspirator in the federal complaint against Nafis.

Nafis was a terrible student in his native Bangladesh, and his middle-class parents said he persuaded them to send him to study in the U.S. as a way of improving his job prospects. They don't believe he was planning an attack.

His father, a banker, said Nafis was so timid he couldn't venture out onto the roof alone.

"My son couldn't have done it," Quazi Ahsanullah said, weeping.

"He is very gentle and devoted to his studies," he said, pointing to Nafis' time
Map locates Federal Reserve in Manhattan (Map locates Federal Reserve in Manhattan)
studying at the private North South University in Dhaka.

Belal Ahmed, a spokesman for the university, said Nafis was put on probation and threatened with expulsion if he didn't bring his grades up. Nafis eventually stopped coming to school, Ahmed said.

Ahsanullah said his son had argued that a U.S. degree would give him a better chance at success in Bangladesh. "I spent all my savings to send him to America," the father said.

Nafis moved to Missouri, where he studied cybersecurity at Southeast Missouri State University. He also became vice president of the school's Muslim Student Association and began attending a mosque.

But he withdrew after one semester and requested over the summer that his records be transferred to a school in Brooklyn. The university declined to identify which school.

Dow, his former classmate at Southeast Missouri State, said Nafis spoke admiringly of bin Laden. At the same time, "he told me he didn't really believe bin Laden was involved in the twin towers because he said bin Laden was a religious man, and a religious man wouldn't have done something like that," Dow said.

He said Nafis gave Dow a copy of the Quran and asked him to read it. But he "didn't rant or rave or say crazy stuff," Dow said.

"What really shocked me the most was he had specifically spoken to me about true Muslims not believing in violence," Dow said
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Dion Duncan of St. Louis, a fellow student and member of the Muslim organization, said: "Nafis was a good kid. He showed no traces of anti-Americanism, or death to America, or anything like that. He was a trustworthy, honest kid."

"He was polite and courteous. He was helpful. All the things you would expect from a good Muslim kid. He prayed five times a day," Duncan said.

Read more: Conflicting images emerge of NY terror suspect - The Denver Post Conflicting images emerge of NY terror suspect - The Denver Post
Read The Denver Post's Terms of Use of its content: Terms of Use - The Denver Post
 
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.. In 2010 Nafis used to follow 12 twitter account




KeLLy MaRiE KeLLy MaRiE

The Real Jay Sean Twitter.


This is the [almost] Official US Jay Sean Fan Club. :-)


Bill Gates Bill Gates ‏ @BillGates


Nelly Furtado Nelly Furtado ‏

Abhishek Bachchan


Priyanka Chopra

Hrithik Roshan

Vijay Mallya

Farhan Akhtar

MTV India

Image002.jpg


shanshad_vaban..er_samne...jpg
 
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Govt to find out if Nafis linked to Jamaat :woot:


Govt to find out if Nafis linked to Jamaat | Bangladesh | bdnews24.com

Fri, Oct 19th, 2012 7:17 pm BdST

Dhaka, Oct 19 (bdnews24.com) – The government will find out whether there is any link between the Jamaat-e-Islami and the Bangladeshi youth held in New York for attempting a bomb attack, a senior Awami League leader said on Friday.

"The arrest of Nafis is a bitter and shameful incident for the nation. It was unexpected. We'll have to find why such an incident occurred," Awami League Joint General Secretary Mahbub-ul-Alam Hanif told a discussion at the Dhaka University Central Library auditorium.

Hanif, also special aide to Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, alleged that the Jamaat had produced militants and spread them within and outside Bangladesh.

"It'll be checked whether they (Jamaat) have any links with Nafis," he said.

Quazi Mohammad Rezwanul Ahsan Nafis was arrested in a sting operation of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) for plotting to bomb the New York Federal Reserve Bank.

A statement of the US Department of Justice said Nafis had been charged with using weapon for massive destruction and helping terrorist network al-Qaeda.

Hanif also spoke on the attack on Buddhists in Chittagong and Cox's Bazar while speaking at the discussion organised to mark the birth anniversary of Sheikh Russell, the slain youngest son of the Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.

"The attack was carried out to damage people's trust in Sheikh Hasina and to destroy the concord between the Buddhists and the Awami League," he said.

Taking a dig at BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia's visit to China, a country of mostly Buddhists, the Awami League leader said she had gone there to 'complain' over the attack on Buddhists.

bdnews24.com/si/ost/nir/1907h
 
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